The writing won't "suffer" without Moseley. We simply won't get to see what he would have brought to season 3 of DSC. And that's too bad. But I trust that the season will still be as well written as the first two have been.Again, to me the worst part about this - the farce of it - is that Discovery recruited an excellent writer with some great SF bona fides who got alienated and quit. The how and the why about it can be debated, but the writing of the show will undoubtedly suffer for it, because he's really just that damn good.
You know the more I think about this when this story gets big someone at CBS is proably get fired and it might be Kurtzman. Not for creative reasons but for not getting a handle on this. Proably not the one most responible but someone will need to be sacrificed.
i don't know how much experience you have working in a corporate setting, but what you describe above is just one way of dealing with situations such as these.What should have happened is whatever writer felt uncomfortable with Mosley's comments either first approached the showrunner (Paradise) or Kurtzman about it, instead of ratting him out directly to HR.
The writing won't "suffer" without Moseley. We simply won't get to see what he would have brought to season 3 of DSC. And that's too bad. But I trust that the season will still be as well written as the first two have been.
In any case, I invite you to at least wait until the season streams before starting a round of bashing.
Someone has already been sacrificed, Jayson, Walter Moseley.
i don't know how much experience you have working in a corporate setting, but what you describe above is just one way of dealing with situations such as these.
The person who made the complaint may have wanted assurances that their identity remain confidential. HR departments offer these guarantees. You could go to your immediate supervisor and ask for anonymity but it is less of a sure thing. And what if the supervisor mishandles the situation? If he/she does, it could end up costing a company multi millions of dollars.
In fact, it wouldn't surprise me if CBS's employee handbook advises employees specifically NOT to report instances of racial insensitivity or sexual harassment etc, or any number of serious employee related problems.
Sometimes, even though it sounds like common sense to you, in the real world, it doesn't work.
This.Or we could not and get back on the topic in the title.
The person who made the complaint may have wanted assurances that their identity remain confidential. HR departments offer these guarantees. You could go to your immediate supervisor and ask for anonymity but it is less of a sure thing. And what if the supervisor mishandles the situation? If he/she does, it could end up costing a company multi millions of dollars.
You only have to look at how quick liberals are to throw 'uncle tom' and other racist epithets at black conservatives or other people of colour who don't go along with the groupthink. Liberals love minorities being victims and get shitty when minorities fail to play by their rules. A bunch of leftwing liberals called antifa recently beat up a gay asian journalist because he is conservative.
But please, continue to lecture me, a person of colour how I might be wrong about this, I've clearly gone off the plantation and need your help to set my mind straight.
But I trust that the season will still be as well written as the first two have been.
So, it'll pretty much blow?
I am a little confused with the timeline. If this incident happened under the new show runner it could be a indication the writing will get worst even if one likes how it has been done in the past.
When it comes to the final product, we have to separate what happens behind-the-scenes from what the completed episode looks like. When I watch, I judge the what's on screen, not the studio politics that went on behind it.
"Brother" and "New Eden" were made underneath Gretchen Berg and Aaron Harberts, and a lot of people who don't like or outright hate Discovery have admitted they like those episodes. Yet Berg and Harberts, as we now know, were horrible showrunners behind-the-scenes.
They were crappy managers, but I'm not sure we can say they were horrible showrunners, since that involves a lot of other tasks besides managing the writer's room.
Kareem Abdul Jabar wrote an article about this in defense of Mosley.
I agree with everything Kareem said here.There’s all kinds of crazy in that previous paragraph. The writer who was offended should have expressed their discomfort directly to Mosley so they could have a mature discussion. The offended writer should have asked themselves a few questions about whether or not taking offense was a legitimate response to a black man telling a story that happened to him and quoting the dialogue used. Clearly, the story has much more visceral impact — which was Mosley’s point — when you hear the actual word being spoken so cavalierly by a police officer. And why was there no offense taken to the use of the derogatory “paddy”? Finally, one has to question the ability of that writer to produce complex and layered characters and themes if they lack the sophistication to understand all that.
HR’s response is predictable because their language policy, like so many other rules in the workplace and schools, is based on the one-size-fits-all condom of policies: zero tolerance. “Zero tolerance” sounds like a strict ethical stance, but in reality it’s a lazy position created so institutions can appear culturally sensitive while really just trying to legally cover their asses. However, zero tolerance in anything related to free speech is antithetical to democracy and is destructive to promoting open discussions about important issues. What makes the American judicial system the foundation of our democracy is the realization that actions cannot be judged outside of context. We don’t judge just the action, we weigh the circumstances, the intent and any other factors that illuminate the cause of the action.
Those damn, dirty librul multi-million-dollar media corporations, and their damn, dirty, liberal systematic silencing of black people!![]()
Damn liberals and their systematic, extremist leftwing liberal oppression of minorities!![]()
You only have to look at how quick liberals are to throw 'uncle tom' and other racist epithets at black conservatives or other people of colour who don't go along with the groupthink.
Liberals love minorities being victims and get shitty when minorities fail to play by their rules. A bunch of leftwing liberals called antifa recently beat up a gay asian journalist because he is conservative.
But please, continue to lecture me, a person of colour how I might be wrong about this, I've clearly gone off the plantation and need your help to set my mind straight.
What did zero tolerance mean? The event was documented and investigated. Human resources explained the policy and let Mosley go without punishment. Yes, it was a zero tolerance policy, but it must be acknowledged that the response was the minimum necessary.And this sums up my position on Zero Tolerance policies. To me "zero tolerance" sounds good on paper but in practice turns into another form of intolerance. Like I said earlier in the thread, several pages back, I think Zero Tolerance is ridiculous.
"The one-size-fits-all condom of policies." Now I know what kind of wording to use if I ever want to object to some unreasonable policy at a company that I work for.I provided a link to the article for you.
For the article itself...
I agree with everything Kareem said here.
And this sums up my position on Zero Tolerance policies. To me "zero tolerance" sounds good on paper but in practice turns into another form of intolerance. Like I said earlier in the thread, several pages back, I think Zero Tolerance is ridiculous.
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This isn't going to effect my opinion of the third season when I watch it. But this was definitely not the writing staff's finest moment.
What did zero tolerance mean? The event was documented and investigated. Human resources explained the policy and let Mosley go without punishment. Yes, it was a zero tolerance policy, but it must be acknowledged that the response was the minimum necessary.
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